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We first found out that we were expecting in January 2015. I was on a golf course in Florida when Jules rang with news that she was pregnant with our first child. I’ve never enjoyed playing golf badly more than I did that day.

The next few weeks were the most exciting of our lives until we were confronted with the devastating news at the 12-week scan that our baby had no heartbeat.

There had been nothing to suggest anything was wrong. It’s what they call a “missed miscarriage”.

It’s rare – approximately one in 100 pregnancies end this way – and it’s crushing. Utterly, sickeningly crushing.

I can vividly recall looking at the screen in the darkened scan room, waiting eagerly to hear all about our baby. Instead, we heard this: “I’m afraid I have some bad news.”

As it turned out, the baby had died approximately three weeks earlier. Words can’t describe that moment.

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The grief is instant, overwhelming and excruciating. You grieve for your unborn child, yourself, your partner, your family but, most of all, for all the memories you’d already started to prepare: Phoning your mum and dad to tell them they’re grandparents, decorating the nursery, taking the little one home for the first time; even the bleary-eyed nappy changes in the early hours of the morning.

There are people who say you can’t miss what you never had. They are totally wrong.

For several weeks, months even, we were consumed by intense heartache. We cried ourselves to sleep many nights. Many mornings started the same way.

Still, we regrouped, recovered and tried again. Life waits for no one, right? Juliet fell pregnant twice more, in November 2015 and February 2016, both of which ended in natural losses around the six-week mark.

It doesn’t get any easier. Each time stung like the first. The circumstances were different, sure, but the devastation was just as intense.

After the third loss, we were, medically speaking, “experiencing recurrent miscarriage”. Another one in 100 likelihood. That entitles you to some tests to check for things such as chromosomal abnormalities and the like – all of which we took and all came back negative.

There was no obvious reason why we couldn’t have a successful, continuing pregnancy. We were, as one consultant put it, just experiencing terribly bad luck.

Neither of us particularly believe in fate, destiny and dumb luck, so we did some research and found a private clinic in Coventry that we thought might offer some hope.

Michael and his wife welcomed their healthy daughter Sadie in November 2017 (Image: Internet Unknown)

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Based at the University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire, NK Testing Clinic research has found that some women who have miscarriages have an abnormally high level of uterine Natural Killer cells in the lining of their womb.

In layman’s terms, these cells act as the body’s frontline defence against “alien” entities in the body.

Unfortunately, they aren’t sophisticated enough to distinguish between “good” and “bad” alien entities, so they attack them all with the same vigour.

And when there is lots of them – well, the bigger the army, the shorter the battle.

Fortunately for us, the team have discovered a way of limiting the impact of those extra cells in pregnancy – a steroid drug called Prednisolone.

The NHS don’t yet recognise the validity of this research but the conversations we discovered and engaged in, primarily on social media, gave us the hope we needed, so Jules was tested.

Lo and behold, the test came back positive – a higher-than-normal instance of Natural Killer cells. The treatment plan was simple: Jules was to start taking Prednisolone when she next fell pregnant.

Until then, we were instructed to stay patient. Easier said than done.

By this point, it was June 2016 – over a year since our first loss. No time at all in the grand scheme of things but the big picture is hard to see when you’ve got your nose pressed against the frame.

The University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshire where Juliet found out she had a higher-than-normal instance of Natural Killer cells (Image: SWNS.com)

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We went out of our way to keep ourselves busy as we waited for life, quite literally, to happen. We went on holiday, did up the house. I ran marathons and even wrote a book about marathon running. Anything to fill the persistent void.

You do whatever you can. You find yourself liking even the most distant acquaintances’ scan photos and pregnancy announcements on Facebook because even though you don’t believe in karma, you’re not prepared to take any chances.

Your behaviour becomes obsessive-compulsive. Not in a “look how quirky and interesting I am” kind of way but in a real and very exhausting way.

We both, unbeknown to one another, resorted to things like knocking on the door frame three times before going into the kitchen, lining up food labels to the front in the fridge. It was a full-blown affliction designed to invite good fortune.

Before long, I began to get paranoid. What if this is as far as we’ll ever get? It started off as an occasional and deeply unhelpful thought but soon became a recurring, constant fear that gnawed away at me, decaying my confidence.

I also convinced myself that some people – including some close friends and family – were going out of their way to avoid us, lest miscarriage be contagious.

In my particularly desperate moments and feeling that we weren’t getting adequate support from health care professionals, I even started to fleetingly wonder if this was an example of Government-ordered population control at work. Don’t give miscarrying couples any help – the country is already over capacity.

In the absence of a plausible, proven explanation for what you’re going through, it is amazing the things you can persuade yourself to be true.

I’m ashamed to admit I even felt a little emasculated by the experiences. I felt that, as a man, I’d failed because I hadn’t been there when my children needed me most.

They needed me to save them and I couldn’t. Nobody could have, of course, but that was no consolation.

I found myself becoming more withdrawn and introverted and my behaviour became increasingly erratic. Up one minute, down the next.

I know Jules felt the same about herself yet our commitment to each other never wavered. Not for a second. Individually, we were broken but, as a couple, we were strong and resilient. Perhaps stronger than ever.

Michael hopes this article will help people see the horrors of a miscarriage through a man's eyes (Image: Caiaimage)

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In February 2017, Jules fell pregnant again. It was terrifying. After you’ve been through a miscarriage, becoming pregnant is not the exclusively joyous experience it once was.

It’s wonderful, of course, but tinged with perpetual worry.

For the first 12 weeks, I dreaded going to sleep at night for fear of waking to the news I feared most. We invested in three private scans – at seven, nine and 11 weeks – for reassurance that everything was progressing normally.

Our 12-week scan went perfectly but the relief it provided was soon replaced by that rising fear again as the 20-week scan approached. It’s strange to be scared of something the majority of people don’t think twice about. Again, though, it went well.

We had another scan at 32 weeks and numerous appointments with our midwife. Everything was fine but we never truly relaxed.

Not until 2.52pm on November 25, 2017, when we welcomed our beautiful little daughter into the world. Sadie Jane McEwan. All 9lbs 11oz of her.

She is a dream come true – the best thing that has ever happened to us. Even that feels like an understatement.

For a while, I was bitter and angry about what we went through. Now, though, I think of myself as only one thing … lucky. So incredibly lucky.

I’ve got an amazing wife, a wonderful family and a beautiful little girl. Some people never get any of those things. I’ve got all three. I’m unbelievably fortunate.

Equally, I’ll never forget how we got here. The twists, the turns, the ups, the downs, the heartache. I’ll never forget it, nor do I think I should. To do so would be to pretend those three other little lives never happened.

I often think about those three little ones. They’ll never know it but they’re my strength, my compassion, my drive, my resolve, my perspective.

They are my determination to be the best dad and husband I can be.

I guess that’s the positive I try to take from an otherwise hopelessly tragic sequence of events.

I’m giving my absolute all to the little one I have because of the three little ones I’ll never hold. If I’m honest, I’m not sure I would have had as much to give had it not been for them. That’s their legacy and I love them unconditionally for it.

Losing a baby can be a lonely and isolating experience, but talking can help you get through it (Image: PA)